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Show You have not dealt fo gallantly with us as w "When I thew juftice Which a difinifs'd offence would after gal/ Shakefpeare All ftudie her T folemnly defy Gave how to gall and pinch this Bolingbroke Shak. Hen. IV No man commits any fin ‘but his confcience {mite him, and his guilty mind is frequently galfed wit Tillotfon the remembrance.of it to keep in To harafs; " to mifchief ftate of uneafinefs window Sidney ga//ed them Light demilances from afar they throw Faften'd with leathern thongs to ga// the foe Dryd. Zin In our wars againft the French of old, we ufed t ga// them with our long bows, ata greater diftanc Addifon than they could fhoot their arrows feen yo 1 hav LIEE D g o GALL at thi ga//in glecking an Shakefpeare gentleman twice or thrice French, fro ‘GA'LLANT. adj. [galant gala, fine drefs, Spanifh. 3. Gay well dreffed; thowy ;- fplendid magnificent A place of broad rivers, wherein fhall go no gall with oars, neither fhall ga//ext fhips pafs thereby If. xxxiii. 21 the wife, the ga//ant The gay and the grave Waller Subdu'd alike, all but one paffion have hig fpirited that an fhoul 2. Brave nimous Scorn magna daring kil mad uncle hi him feek 'his revenge in manner gal/ant enough Sidney ‘But, fare thee well, thou art a gallant youth Shakefpeare A gallant man, whofe thoughtsfly at the highef Digby game, requires no further infight 3. Fine; noble; fpacious There are no tricks in plain and finple faith But hollow men like horfes hot at hand Make gallant {héw and promife of their mettle 4. Courtly with refpect to ladies H difcourfed ho @ga//an an Shakefpeare brav ho a journe thing it would be for his highnefs to mak dnto Spain, and to fetch home his miftrefs Clarendon When firft the foul of love is fent abroad "The gay troops begi In gallant thought to plume their painted wings Lhomfon Ga'Lrant. 2 /. [from the adjetive. 1. A gay, fprightly, airy, {plendid man -The reformation of our travell'd gallants "Thatfill the court with quarrels, talk, and taylors Shakefpeare "The gallants and lufty youths of Naples came an Knolles offcred themfelves unto Vaftius The gallants, to prote€t the lady'sright Their fauchions brandifh'd at the grifly fpright Dyyden Gallants, look to't, you fay there are no fprights But DIl come dance about your beds at nights Dryden. A whoremafter debauch them One, wor wh 3 wWOO€er t careffes wome to pieces with age, fhews himfelf young gallant She had left the goo brought away her gallant on Wh GA'LLANTRY. 7. /. [galanterie, French. 1. Splendour of appearance; thow; magthe fea fhine with ga/lantry Shakefpeare ma at home, an Addifon's Spetiator court al th gallantr GA'TLEY French o The martial Moors, in gallantry refin'd Invent new arts to make their charmers kind Granville lik virtue and vice a for debauchery of compoundin as if a woman were allowed to b to endure the agitation of the main ocean provided fhe be not a profligate; as if ther and in famy begins Savift Great Neptune grieved underneath the loa Of fhips, hulks, gallies, barks, and brigandines Ga'Lreass. n. f. [galeas, French.] heavy low-built veffel, with both fail Fairfax In the ages following, navigation did every wher greatly decay, by the ufe of ga//ies, and fuch veffel as could hardly brook the ocean Bacon Jafon ranged the coafts of Afia the Tefs in a open boat or kind of galley Raleigh's Hiffory On oozy ground his gallies moor and oars, Itcarries three mafts, but the cannot be lowered, as in a galley. I has thirty-two feats for rowers, and fi or feven flaves to each "o carry thre Their heads are turn'd to fea, their fterns to fhore tire of guns at the head, and at the fter there are two tire of guns woman for marriage In the two latter fenfe it has commonly the accent ‘on the laf {yllable Ga'LLantry. adv. [from galiant. . Gayly; fplendidly 4, Bravely ; nobly ; generoufly 7 f. [galea, Italian; galere derived, as fome think, fro 1. A veflel driven with oars, much in uf in the Mediterranean, but found unabl betwee were a certain point where ga//antry ends Bacon's Phyf. Rem galea, a helmet, pi@ured anciently on th prow; as others from yzaedrys, the fwordfith; as others from galleon, exprefling i Syriac men expofed to the fea. Fro galley come galleafs, galleon, gallin. refined addrefs to women 5. Vicious love; lewdnefs Pope Make a compound body of glafs and alletyle that is, to have the colour milky like a ¢ alcedon being a ftuff between a porcellane and.a glafe Shakefpeare I would have arm'd to-day 4. Courtfhip vicious The feats in the playhoufe above th this wor has the fame import with gallipor Waller generofity an Addifon And all the thunder of the pit afcends GA'LLETYLE 7. /o 1 fuppof 3. A number of gallants Deiphobus are covered galleries that lead from th Whileall its throats the ga//ery extends The eminence of your condition, and the ga/lantry of your principles, will invite gentlemen t the ufeful andennobling ftudy of nature Glanv. Scepf. Preface It look them.e Graunt pit, in which the meaner people fit and al The Englith youth flock to their admiral Troy palace to five different churches 2 tious finery He&or as appears glittering grandeur; oftenta nificence Mak churches of London are drivin g apace the many galleries every day buili ti Ther Dryden Dié The Venetians pretend they could fetout, in cafe | 2* It is proverbially confidered as a plac of toilfome mifery, becaufe criminal of great neceffity, thirty men of war, a hundre galleys, and ten galeaffes Addifon on Italy are condemned to row in them My father hath no lef The moft. voluptuous perfon, were he tied t Than three great argofies, befides ‘two galea/fes follow his hawks and his hounds, his dice and hi And twelve tight gallies Shakefpeare courtfhips every day, would find ‘it the greateft torment thatcould befal him: he would fly to the mine Gavve'on = [ [galion, French. and the gallies for his recreation, and to the fpad large fhip with four or fometimes fiv and the mattock for a diverfion from the mifery of decks, now in ufe only among the Spacontinual uninterrupted pleafure South niards GatLe -sLav # [galle an flave. I affured them that T would ftay for them a Trinidado, and thatno force fhould drive me thence man condemned for fome crime to ro in the gallies except I were funk, or fet on fire by the Spanif galleons Raleigh's Apology The number of veffels were ene hundred an thirty, whereof galleafles and ga//eons fevenity-two goodly fhips, like floating towers or caftles Bacon's War with Spain As if one chain were not fufficient to load poo men, ‘he muft be clogged with innumerable chains this is juft fuch another freedom as the Turkit galley-flaves do enjoy Bramb Hardened galley-flaves defpife manumiffion Decay of Piety The furges gently dath againft the fhore GA'LLERY. 7. /. [galerie, French; derive by Du Cange from galeria, low Latin, a The new proclamation What is't for 2 was brought here from England, which we ordere Swift to be burnt by the common hangman 2. Bravery; noblenefs The Helots had gotten new heart, and wit divers forts of thot {rom corners of firects and houfe laft year a pape you in a parallel cafe did wit know no T pity thofe 1 d GA GA AT Flocks quit the plains, and ga/ley-flaves their oar fine room. Garth 1. A kind of walk alon g the floor of a|Ga'LL1ARD. 7. /- [gaillard, French; imahoufe, into which the doors of the apartgined to be derived from the Gaulifh @2 ments open; in general, any buildin genius; and gap. of which the length much exceeds the 1 . A gay, brifk, lively man; a fine fellow breadth Selden is a.galliard by himfelf Cleaveland In moft part there had 'been framed by art fuch | pleafan arbors that on anfwering another the became a gallery -aloft from tree to tree, almof round about, ‘which below gave a perfe&t fhadow Sidney High lifted up were many lofty towers And goodly palleries fair overlaid Your -galler Not to the foe yet known Denham Nor is:the fhape of our cathedrals proper for ou preaching auditories, ‘but rather the figure of a amphitheatre, ‘with ‘galleries. gradually overlookin cac -other for inte this conditio the parif I 1 did think, by the excellent conftitution of th leg, it was form'd under the ftar of a.galliard Spenfer Have we pafs'd through, not without much content Shakefp ‘The row of return on the banquet fide, let it be all ftately galleries, in which galleries let there b three cupolas Bacon. A private gallery *twixt th® apartments led An aftive, nimble, {pritely dance is in both fenfes now obfolete Shakefpeare's Twelfth Night There's nought in Franc Thhat can be with a nimble ga//iard won You cannot revel into dukedoms there Shake/p T there be any that would take up all the time let him find means to take them off, and brin others on; as muficians ufe to do with thofe tha Bacon dancetoalong galliards The tripla's and changing of timeshave an agreementwith the changes of motion; as when galliar time and meafure time are in the medley of on Bacon dance GA'ILLARDISE n. [French. riment; ‘exuberant gaiety Mer Not .in '"fi |